Shovel On A Little More Coal

The media trend of the last ten years is a demonstration of the power of hope. There are now three national networks covering recruiting, plus ESPN, plus a cottage industry of who-dat bloggers who get picked up by these national networks far faster than actual journalism majors get picked up by, you know, newspapers. (Michigan has no journalism major, which explains why you can't throw a rock at a sports editor without causing him to hire a Daily grad.) This site alone saw two guys snapped up and almost hired a third who was snapped up just a bit later. Meanwhile, newspapers continue to give us Drew Sharp and wonder why they're withering on the vine.

Here's all you need to know about recruiting sites: they can charge for content on the internet. Hope, man. Hope.

Because the next guy is always going to be The Guy. The Guy will rescue us from the purgatory of not being Alabama and deliver us unto glory. He may be a defensive back, or a running back, or a quarterback, or a defensive lineman. He is going to be Woodson or Adrian Peterson or Andrew Luck or Jadeveon Clowney—except Clowney's defense just got torched for 41 points and lost.

Jadeveon Clowney! Indisputably The Guy, and somehow still not. If Jadeveon Clowney can't be the guy, well… there's always the recruiting sites. It's college football. The next arrival is always just around the corner.

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Devin Gardner turned in what I can confidently state is the worst play in the history of organized football—I have watched all of it from Pop Warner on up—and was still awesome Saturday night. Awesome. I do not mean this in the Spots-gave-me-extra-wings way. I mean this in the light-from-the-sky, tremble-at-the-power, bow-down-lest-we-all-perish kind of way. If I could use the words "yea" and "lo" genuinely, I would deploy them now. The numbers are amazing. The numbers do not do it justice.

Here's the thing about Notre Dame's defense: it's going to be just fine. Gardner ate plenty of defensive lineman Saturday, usually after delivering a perfectly-placed dart. Notre Dame blitzed him almost two-thirds of the time and got the one huge mistake and nothing else. Notre Dame defensive backs were, with rare exceptions, in position to make a play on anything other than a perfectly-placed ball. They could not make plays without committing pass interference, called or not, because Devin Gardner was spitting hot death all night long.

If you happen to rewatch that game you'll see did-that-just-happen surgical strikes even more impressive the second time around.

On third and goal from the 14, Drew Dileo screwed up his route. He ran next to Gallon, bringing a third defender into the area. Gardner fired a ball in between all three guys that hit Gallon in the hands instead of the chest because KeiVarae Russell was riding him like a horse. Earlier in the drive he'd tossed up that back-shoulder throw that he might have been attempting against Central Michigan when he got hit, and Gallon plucked it out of the air. Russell was there. He just couldn't do anything about it.

By the fourth quarter, Gardner and Gallon had become so proficient at the back shoulder fade that Notre Dame was actually sitting on it, which I have never seen before. There were a lot of things last night that I haven't seen before in a winged helmet, that have traditionally been the province of passing specialists like Texas Tech. They tried to man up Crab, once, and Texas Tech beat the #1 team in the country without a running game or defense. Michigan has at least one of those.

In the aftermath, Michael Crabtree looked a lot like you did at some point last night:

IS THIS REAL LIFE

Oh and Gardner led the team in rushing at 7.5 yards an attempt. He might be The Guy. Gardner hinted at this kind of thing over the last six games, and now he has delivered. You could feel it coming, maybe, but Michigan just graduated a guy who was The Guy, like Jadeveon Clowney is, and could not get over the hump, like Clowney. Even in the world where talent comes through it doesn't always end up steamrolling the opposition.

Devin Gardner just left Notre Dame a two-dimensional smudge in the rear view mirror, and now it's downhill for a while. Shovel on a little more coal, and let's watch old 98 roll.

Highlights

Awards

Brady Hoke Epic Double Point Of The Week. How does a guy who threw four touchdowns at nearly 10 YPA and ran for 90 additional yards split this award? Well, to get the award by himself he has to be a separate entity from guy who caught eight of his passes for 184 yards. This does not appear to be the case. DevinJeremy GardnerGallon, come on down.

Honorable Mention. Thomas Gordon and Jarrod Wilson (invisible all game in a good way), Drew Dileo (THROW IT TO DILEO), Brendan Gibbons (your record-holder for kicking consistency /2009 version of your head explodes), Blake Countess (drifted off his man for critical INT), Brian Kelly (thanks for not running the ball).

Brady Hoke Epic Double Fist-Pump Of The Week. Since it featured Borges screwing with ND, an NFL dart from Gardner, a crazy spin move from Gallon, and Chesson The Destroyer reveling in the blood of the fallen, this is an easy pick:

Honorable mention: Countess's game-changing interception, Jeremy Jackson catching a long handoff for seven yards because ND is playing in the parking lot against Jeremy Jackson for some reason, Fitz Toussaint using a tackle attempt as an awesome juke to dart 20 yards when Michigan really needed something, either of Gardner's perfect back-shoulder throws to Gallon, Gardner nailing Gallon 40 yards downfield, and Gardner taking off on a zone read so open you'd think Stephen Threet was running it.

Epic Double Fist-Pumps Past.

8/31/2013: Dymonte Thomas introduces himself by blocking a punt. 9/7/2013: Jeremy Gallon spins through four Notre Dame defenders for a 61-yard touchdown.

Offense

Upchurch

We have a number one receiver. Jeremy Gallon, ladies and gentlemen: mostly open, still catching things if he's not open, acutely aware of everything and anything Devin Gardner may do on any particular play. That was an all-time performance from Gallon. It tied Jim Smith's 1975 Purdue game for the 6th-most receiving yards in Michigan history; that and another of the games in front of him were laughable blowouts. Those that remain:

Derrick Alexander catching 7 passes for 188 yards in a loss(!) to 5-6 Illinois in 1993.

Gallon, ND 2013.

In terms of quality of opposition and importance of performance, only Braylonfest tops what Gallon just did. Roundtree was going up against a tire fire defense and largely benefited from being wide, wide open; Streets and Alexander were playing bad teams. Only Braylon bailing Michigan out singlehandedly can compete with Gallon's array of back-shoulder adjustments and crazy spin-move touchdown.

So yeah, he's not big, but he's really tough to cover, catches everything, and has a telepathic connection with his quarterback. He played like an All-American Saturday. Michigan has a number one receiver.

*[Oh man, that game is just appalling. With Tom Brady, Tai Streets, Anthony Thomas, and a bevy of future NFL linemen Michigan averaged under two yards a rush even when you remove a –22 yard Jason Vinson attempt that must have been a fumbled punt snap and seven(!!!) sacks of Tom Brady. They had 259 yards of total offense. OSU had just put up 56 on the Gophers. OC: Mike DeBord. Viva Borges!]

Borges para Presidente. What does Al Borges have to do to get Tlon, Uqbar, Orbus Tertius, Hoover Street Rag? Is 41 points and nearly 500 yards without an effective basic running game against a defense that returned seven starters from the #2 scoring D in the country insufficient? WHAT MORE CAN HE DO, HOOVER STREET RAG?

I may take the Borges-O-Meter too seriously, but man: Borges had a game. The long Gallon touchdown was opened up by Michigan's play design. He handled Devin's running for maximum impact without exposing him to too much damage. He remained aggressive to re-extend Michigan's lead to two scores late, pulling out an uncovered wheel route to pick up a big chunk of that drive. The early reverse would have been a touchdown if Schofield and Gardner didn't go after the same player. It was pretty good, man.

I love this staff's feel for the game. Michigan plays high offense and low offense games correctly; in this one Michigan could not feel particularly confident in a four-point lead so they went and got some more.

"You're dealing with an offense that can run option as well as power, and we've got to be prepared for a little bit of everything." - Brian Kelly

Hoorah.

Number two… uh. Outside receivers not named Jeremy Gallon had three catches, one of them a long handoff to Jeremy Jackson because for some reason Notre Dame was playing in the parking lot on Jeremy Jackson. Actual downfield throws to them: two, and for the second straight game Jehu Chesson doesn't get targeted.

The wild efficiency of Gardner to Gallon makes that less of a problem than it might be otherwise, especially with Dileo doing Dileo things underneath to reduce the need for a burly slant merchant on third and six. I'm still a little leery about how dependent on Gallon Michigan is. While it's not as easy to do something about that as internet ND complainers would have it, diversity is important to keep opponents off balance.

The good news is that Michigan now has three weeks before they play Minnesota and has some time to integrate those outside guys into the passing game a bit more. At this point Jackson is who he is; Chesson is a guy who is still pretty raw and could improve greatly. You know his blocking isn't keeping him off the field.

The real number two. Drew Dileo screwed up a route that one time; he emphatically did not screw up his route when he scored. He freed himself with a slick jab step that drew a Wes Welker comparison from Herbstreit that for once didn't annoy, because it seemed on point. Dileo also rescued the first drive of the game with a fantastic diving catch on third and six that elicted a "wow" from me in the stands. Three catches for a long of eight yards doesn't quite capture his importance.

If AJ Williams is out for a significant period of time I wonder if Michigan will go to a three-wide base package. Having Dileo out there opens up a lot of options underneath that might get some of those tight end seams open. It seems like Michigan should be a team that passes to open up the run right now.

This one wasn't called (and Gallon caught it anyway) [Upchurch]

Interferences. Michigan's last touchdown drive featured a couple of pass interference penalties that turned third down into first down and have been a source of bitching from some Irish fans. To my eyes, the first one was a call that you don't always see but was correct, as the ND DB is shoving Gallon without looking back for the ball with the pass in the air. (Meanwhile, the guy landed out of bounds and didn't catch the ball, so it wasn't an interception.) The second is obvious as Farley's grabbing Funchess the whole way. It might have been holding instead of PI, but the end result is the same.

The call in the first half was obvious, as well, and prevented a touchdown since without the tug and then hold that was Gardner threading a tiny window.

Upchurch

Ground: pounded. Aside from a couple nice Toussaint runs on which he made something out of nothing and Gardner zone reads and draws, Michigan got stuffed. Part of this was a major upgrade in the guys on the opposing defensive line; part was ND's linebackers heading hell-for-leather to any stretch motion. Michigan got some decent gains off that when they ran play action, but they were really lacking a counter trey to gash that tendency on the ground. I think Borges had a great game, but that stands out as a problem. Teams can nerf the stretch by overplaying it, and one of the great frustrations of the DeBord era was a total lack of counters.

Michigan showed their counter in the Central game, pulling Taylor Lewan to the backside, but Lewan couldn't execute. Getting that play up and running is likely a priority.

Overall, the lack of production on the ground seems about half rock-paper-scissors failures and half the offensive line getting overwhelmed. It's all downhill from here for those guys, at least.

Efficiency. The next bullet is about the defense's part in outdistancing Notre Dame on the scoreboard without getting similar distance in yards. Set aside the free touchdown and Michigan had 18 more points despite outgaining ND by only 50 yards. That's because Michigan turned 6 scoring opportunities (ie, drives that reached field goal range) into 34 points, with the big play from Gallon accounting for the other seven. Notre Dame had seven opportunities and came away with 23 points that would have been 19 if not for a fortunate bounce on their first touchdown.

Defense

Yes, it was hairy. It worked. A hairy night for the defense as Tommy Rees spent large chunks of the game straight dealin', but when the smoke cleared Rees had taken 51 attempts to acquire 314 yards, two touchdowns, and two interceptions. That's a pedestrian 6.2 yards an attempt.

While it felt like death as Rees and company were jetting down the field between the 20s, the strategy worked. ND drives that reached field goal territory:

Four-yard touchdown to TJ Jones on a deflection.

ND stalls at the 26, kicks 44-yard field goal.

ND stalls at the 7, kicks 24-yard field goal.

20-yard touchdown to Troy Niklas.

Turnover on downs at the 17.

ND stalls at the 23, kicks 40-yard field goal.

Rees intercepted by Blake Countess after two deflections.

ND racked up a ton of yards but was not particularly efficient at turning those into points—the offense acquired 23, a mediocre number. (Let's say the deflections offset.) Their longest completion of the night was 23 yards. The safeties did not split like a cantaloupe hit with an axe and spill out a bounty of touchdowns.

Michigan was content to sit back in their nickel package, rush four, get nowhere near Rees, and constrict as the field did. It was a gameplan based on scoring a lot of points themselves, which Michigan did, and continued doing the entire game. It is really easy to see a Carr version of this team putting the offense in the barn at some point and getting scorched; Brady Hoke is aggressive, start to end.

In the end Michigan overcame Notre Dame dominating the trenches to score a relatively easy victory. When's the last time that happened? The overall game plan was fantastic on both sides of the ball.

[Upchurch]

Earn the right to rush four: uh. Speaking of the trenches: Rees was sacked once on Notre Dame's final drive; other than that he was almost never hit unless Michigan was literally bringing more rushers than Notre Dame had blockers. A resounding splat after showing so much promise in the opener.

I was particularly down on Frank Clark but after a casual rewatch he did seem to be Michigan's most consistently bothersome defensive lineman. That wasn't saying much, unfortunately. He's yet to get particularly close to a sack in two games, and this one featured 51 passing attempts on which Rees often took a significant amount of time to throw the ball.

Secondary rotation. Avery didn't play much if at all, and Hollowell was the third corner the entire game. Stribling got in for a few plays in the third quarter in place of Raymon Taylor. I wouldn't be surprised to see Stribling surge past Hollowell by the time the November gauntlet rolls around, but if Michigan was dead set on making ND bleed down the field it's an easy call to go with the junior over the true freshman.

I don't actually have much in the way of opinions about the secondary. This is going to be a game in which I really wish I had a view of what was going on downfield.

They didn't blow any coverages, which is a major plus since Rees had time to survey, and Countess made a big-time play by coming off his guy to pick Rees at the end of the first half. The rest of it was mostly being in position to tackle on short stuff and giving Rees small downfield windows on long stuff. Rees hit a fair number of those, and tossed a fair number out of bounds. They were consistent. The spirit of Kovacs is in them.

I have even fewer opinions on the linebackers. They seemed to be missing some chucks on Niklas and were not to be found in the run game, but the line had a tough time getting any push to help them out and with six in the box the whole game it's tough to put a lot of blame on them.

Their coverage was okay. When you've got Davaris Daniels matched up on Desmond Morgan about all you can hope for is Morgan providing a relatively small window for Rees to hit; Morgan did and Rees hit it. Ross almost had a great one-handed pick and may have deflected the Niklas touchdown.

Bitching about the other team's gameplan is go. Notre Dame's inability to get anything long had a lot to do with Brian Kelly's refusal to run the danged ball despite Michigan's inability to stop those pistol power runs. At one point those gashed Michigan for gains of 12 and 7, and then Notre Dame threw from an empty set. I don't think the Irish ran play action all night. They ran once in the redzone.

I get irritated when Michigan tips its run/pass call by receiver substitution (no Gallon == run), but that doesn't even compare to having a statue like Rees by himself in the backfield. All you had to know about that strategy was what happened when Rees motioned a tailback into the backfield with him: the linebackers came five yards closer to the line of scrimmage. O RLY.

It seemed that ND was spooked by their first two drives, on which Michigan booted them off the field when they ran on third and short. The first one was Mattison calling a great blitz that put Frank Clark inside the right tackle too quick for anyone to do anything about. That's Mattison winning at rock-paper-scissors; Notre Dame seemed to accept it as fate. The sequence that led to the turnover on downs late was indicative: on third and two ND threw a wide receiver screen against two Michigan DBs within four yards of the line of scrimmage.

Maybe the last two years have convinced Brian Kelly he has absolutely no chance of rushing for a third and short conversion against Mattison? Actually, that's a defensible point of view.

Miscellaneous

Finally: a weird-ass number. Gardner in the 98 gets a thumbs up here despite my general dislike for players changing numbers midstream. I like that Michigan has gone full-bore to having the old numbers on a position-appropriate player despite their weirdness, and that outweighs the midstream change.

The oddity of a QB wearing 98 is the basis of a tradition, notable enough to occasion posts explaining WTF is going on at SBNation and questions on message boards across the country. One of my big problems with Brandon is that most of his moves have been to erode the differences between Michigan and Generic Sporting Experience; I'm a firm believer that you should be creating points of difference, not similarity. (Look at this website.) Having a QB wearing 98 is a point of difference that facilitates cult-like behavior.

So I thought it was a missed opportunity when they unretired Oosterbaan's number and gave it to a linebacker. I get that they've got 21 at receiver and I imagine #1 is on the docket sometime soon, so it made sense to spread it out a bit. I still wish other fanbases were asking "why is that receiver wearing 47?" just like they're asking why Gardner is wearing 98 right now.

The band. I cannot hear it even a little bit anymore, and I sit in row 16. Any musicality they are preserving in the stands is washed out by the amplification, which sounds really bad where I am, and when they're on the field it's a win when I can actually hear The Victors. The intricate tootlings are all for naught.

Hear it for the first time. Halftime:

I said Michigan should hire Beyonce as an assistant coach a couple years back. Close enough!

Pom-pom update! The department did a crappy job of handing them out, so there were like three people in my section who had one. Thanks, department. I salute your inability to flood the stands with vision-destroying plastic.

Okay. Point Special K.

Minus a point for playing something thematically inappropriate that I can't remember right before the fourth quarter.

Here

At this point I imagine the Venn diagram of “People who read MGoBlog diaries” and “People who have played computer football” resembles a perfect solar eclipse, so if you only think of John Madden as a character played by Frank Caliendo, I guess just move on to the next section.

For everyone else, though, UM’s offensive playcalling reminded me of those great 16-bit and early PlayStation/XBox/N64 Madden games where they hadn’t quite figured out how to properly balance player attributes when it came to speedy QBs and so you could call a shotgun pass on basically every down with impunity (I know most people consider Michael Vick circa 2001-2004 as the apex mobile QB in video games, but picking the Eagles with Randall Cunningham or the 49ers with Steve Young led to untold fights when I was in junior high). With one of those guys in the backfield, every pass carried the real possibility of a QB run with about a 1% chance that the defense could stop you before 5-6 yards. And on the off chance that you found yourself on 3rd/4th-and-long, just call for a Hail Mary/4 Verts and you could either throw the ball into the tiniest of windows because your QB had a Howitzer or, to be extra dickish, run for the first while juking every LB about 15 times. A mobile QB was about as close to god mode as one could get on the football field.

Well, with Devin Gardner at QB and Borges overjoyed with a QB who isn’t afraid to scramble sensibly (sorry Denard), UM is trotting out the type of offense that seems largely immune to defensive adjustments. Whereas in years past a collapsing pocket was almost immediately followed by a tuck-and-run, Gardner seems more than happy to move around while his WRs work to get open. And if that doesn’t happen quickly enough, or if there are yards available on the ground, Gardner just gallops 2-3 yards a stride and can pick it up efficiently. A couple of times Gardner basically rolled out, outran with ease an ND player barreling down on him from the edge, and calmly surveyed the field looking for an open Gallon, Dileo, Funchess, basically anyone. At least once he just kept running; other times he’d throw for the first. You didn’t often see that type of play last year, or at least run so easily and successfully, and it seems like it will be a staple in UM’s offense going forward until such time as any defense (i.e. MSU and that’s about it) shows the ability to slow it down.

* Critically underutilized WR, Drew Dileo caught 3 for 18 yards, and had the other receiving TD. Kudos to Borges for calling that play on 2nd down. If ND holds us to a FG, it's still a one-score game. Instead, I imagine Borges going over his playsheet, thinking, hey, it's been awhile since we threw one to critically underutilized WR Drew Dileo. Let's do that. TD. Ballgame. I go to sleep happy.

In the end, the lights were on, and someone was home. For a sixteenth straight occasion, Michigan's football players walked off their home field in triumph, having first made their way to the student section to share the moment with their peers. There were gimmicks to be sure, Michigan Stadium's first thank youtifo, lasers, flyovers, celebrity cameos, the most underutilized giant disco ball in the history of mankind, but they were ephemeral to what was a Michigan football experience at its core, dread, hope, more dread, still more dread, and finally relief.

Can we get a tifo that's about football? That would be a unique tradition in college football.

The biggest part of the rushing game, and the main reason Fitz got the bulk of the carries, is Michigan didn't fumble. An experienced rusher will protect the football, and that's why Fitz played basically the entire game. As the line develops, expect Fitz's output to increase.

BRENDAN GIBBONS – For those of you too young to remember, Bo did not offer scholarships to kickers in the ‘70s and early ‘80s. As a result, Michigan had walk-ons who did an ok job of splitting the uprights. So for Gibby to have now successfully kicked sixteen consecutive field goals…it’s BEYOND impressive. He just might be the best kicker to ever wear the winged helmet!

Doing nothing to dispel a dumb notion that did a disservice to the latest game in the storied Notre Dame-Michigan rivalry Saturday night, the host school served chicken for dinner in the Michigan Stadium press box.

Coincidence?

That's a Chicago Tribune writer who seems rather annoyed at the idea that Notre Dame cancelling the series so they can continue to play Purdue does not represent a fear of playing Michigan. Because Michigan wanted to have one of the two-year hiatuses that have been standard in the series since its resumption.

Devin Gardner was on his back in his own end zone, looking up at the lights and a sea of maize. It was the fourth quarter of Michigan vs. Notre Dame, and Gardner had made the worst mistake of his football life. Could his legacy be tainted before it even really began? The whole world was here it seemed, and now they were all looking at him on his back in the end zone and he was alone, all alone.

What was he thinking as he lay there, arms sprawled outward, looking up at the sky, at the lights? He stared at Stephon Tuitt, who cradled the football in his arms in Michigan’s end zone. What was he thinking?

The plan worked and Michigan won, but this was more bend-but-don’t-break than overpowering dominance. Notre Dame hardly ran, but when they did it was alarmingly effective. The top two Fighting Irish backs averaged 5.3 and 7.4 yards a rush. A cornerback, junior Raymon Taylor, led the team in tackles. Thomas Gordon, a safety, was second.

More concerning was the lack of big defensive plays. Sure, Countess had the two game-changing interceptions, but the first was a bad pass, and the second hit off Taylor’s leg. The Wolverines need to force the issue more.

"It was a horrible decision," Gardner said. "But everybody's going to look to me for confirmation that we're going to be all right.

"I stayed level."

Gardner's mistake could have been a nightmare, except, of course, it wasn't. The Michigan defense eventually got Gardner the ball back -- with a 14-point lead shrunk to four -- and Gardner calmly took the team back down the field for an eventual game-clinching touchdown pass in the Wolverines' 41-30 win over No. 14 Notre Dame.

New Years has become my least favorite holiday. I feel like the Rose Bowl is "National Prom Day" or something and I'm some fat girl who never got to go in High School, and every year I'm reminded about how awesome it is, while I'm bitter as fuck.

Gardner out ran a slow defense. His throwing motion/action isn't very good. His mistake in the end zone is among the worst plays I have ever seen in the sport. "We should be wise and knowledgeable enough football fans to give him the credit he is due". I ain't giving him squat and please don't include me in "we". If that was Vince Young last night they would have scored 70...

gardner's shot put arm was less than impressive, his safety saving td int toss was less than impressive, the int Jaylon dropped was less than impressive (would've been a good catch), his missing hoke calling a TO while scoring on a busted play was less than impressive, our lack of 3rd down execution made him look very impressive.... I haven't re-watched the game, but diaco/kelly and co gave gardner all the room in the world to succeed. We sucked, were a half step slow and gave up third and long all night. If you for a minute think that this um team has the firepower that 'bama had last year you're wrong. The point total last night is a disgrace. Our team has massive problems and it starts with Kelly's unwillingness to physically dominate and complete willingness to finesse when it's not necessary. He's reguarly a shitty coach with a poor attention to detail.

"In the end Michigan overcame Notre Dame dominating the trenches to score a relatively easy victory. When's the last time that happened? The overall game plan was fantastic on both sides of the ball."

This naturally brings me back to the last to Michigan-USC Rose Bowls, when USC was able to control the line of scrimmage despite Michigan's healthy helping of NFL talent. The contrast in how Michigan adapted to that challenge is startling. One of my major worries when Hoke and Borges came in is that, in recruiting a massive OL, they would depend upon that massive OL to dominate like Carr did and be unable to adapt.

That fear is obviously misplaced.

***

Somewhere in the mists of the preseason prediction threads, I said that Michigan could be anywhere between middling, if Devin was inconsistent and only okay, and great, if Devin was Vince Young. My logic was that a great performance this season from Devin could/would hide a lot of weaknesses elsewhere in the team, particularly if the OL struggled.

Saturday was everything we could have hoped for. Devin is a difference-maker. Brian obviously buys in; I do too.

It's likely that Michigan will spit the bit somewhere this season, because that's what happens in college football. Perhaps Devin tosses two crucial picks at MSU, or we revisit the 2000 game in Evanston. But if Devin can continue to play this way, Pasadena is very much within reach. Like, either date.

I think you are overestimating the talent on some of those past Michigan teams. Jake Long is the only offensive lineman off the entire two-deep to ever get drafted from the 2006 team and the only one still in the league. Adam Kraus was an all-conference performer, but only lasted one season on the Ravens practice squad. Reuben Riley was a practice squad guy for 4-5 years. The USC front seven they went against featured Keith Rivers (#9 overall, still active in the NFL), Rey Maualuga (#38 overall, just signed a new two year deal with Cincinnati), Dallas Sartz (5th round pick), Brian Cushing (#15 overall, Pro Bowler), Lawrence Jackson (#28 overall, still on Vikings practice squad), Fili Moala (2nd round pick, still with the Colts), and Sedrick Ellis (#7 overall, still on Bears practice squad).

In other words, every single guy got drafted and only one is out of the NFL. And guys like Clay Matthews were on the bench.

On the 2003 team, David Baas was a 2nd round pick (no Michigan lineman was selected between Baas in 2005 and Long in 2008) and has been a long time starter in the NFL. Tony Pape was a 7th round pick who was apparently awesome in NFL Europe and stuck around on a few practice squads for 4-5 years. The other three guys made the practice squad rounds for a couple years each.

One NFL starter and 1.5 draft picks is basically the high water mark of the latter half of Coach Carr's tenure at UM. And while Hart and Perry both got drafted, they combined for > 900 yards total in their NFL careers.

It was a pretty solid effort on both sides of the ball. Outside of Gibbons though, special teams still seem to be a concern. UM gave up a 50yd kick off return and Wile averaged a meager 31.3yds per punt. The shank brings that down some but even his other punts weren't that great and one punt was returned for 18 yds. Not to mention Norfleet fumbled a punt too.

"auf den spuren des verlorenen henkelpotts" can be loosely translated as "on the trail of the lost handle potts", which, in the case of BVB, would be referring to the Champions League trophy they were seeking...

Immediately after the interception my wife turned to me and asked "why in the heck did he do THAT?" My response was "cause he's a kid who made a bad decision under severe pressure." Fans (especially people my age) tend to forget these are very young men we are watching that dont always make the best decisions when threatened and I would say Devin's situation (running out of real estate in the end zone, third and long, nowhere to go, under heavy pressure) was about as harried as one could be.

One happy note from the pre-game I'm please to report. Nosce Te Ipsum did come by our tailgate and did get to try Jill's Chicken-Avocado bake on Saturday. It was nice to put a face and person next to the avatar! He's a real good guy.

That's why my initial reaction wasn't about the decision. Everyone knew he made a mistake, and DG knew it most of all. There's a learning moment there, and it happens, he won't do it again, and he doesn't need a coach to tell him that. The real coaching moment there is teaching when to step up and into the pocket, when to eat it for a sack of 6, when to step into a throw from the pocket and launch it OOB over a WR's head, and how to vary your escape moves. The coaching point isn't the mistake at the end, because Gardner knows better than anyone else not to do that again.

That game was ridiculous. Illinois in those days was coached by "Midnight" Lou Tepper, who regularly fielded teams with stout defenses (Kevin Hardy & Simeon Rice were on that team) but erratic, unreliable offenses. Michigan recovered a late fumble that we thought had sealed the victory, but their defense stuffed us. Then their QB--a proto-Juice Williams by the name of Johnny Johnson--completed a game-winning TD pass into triple-coverage with two guys hanging around Johnson's legs.

Something about losing to Illinois just makes me have to drink vast quantities of shit alcohol. In '93 it was probably about a case of Schlitz Ice. The '99 loss was worse--whole fifth of Old Crow that night. Now I'm too old for M to ever lose to Illinois again.

Not sure the guidelines for changing the banner mid season, but if Texas can hire Greg Robinson after two games, surely Brian can change the Mgoblog Banner to that picture of Devin in the same time frame.

If nothing else, the competition for next year's banner is done. That has to be it.

I wasn't in great position to see the highly questioned Pass Interference call on the near-pick, don't forget the play before where Jake Butt got absolutely run over while trying to come back on a ball at the goal line. My impression was the PI on the next play was effectively a make-up call for missing it on the play before. Also, Funchess getting held was indisputably the correct call. Watching from the South (far) endzone you could easily see his jersey get grabbed and stretched as he tried to make his cut and get seperation. And with the missed facemasks ND has no right to complain about the refs.

That RCMB game thread is worth the click and read through by the way. I've never seen such delicious tears in a game thread about a rivals school's game against someone else. RCBM is filled with cringe worthy idiocy normally, but with how bad their team looks so far, the desperation is so palpable.

EDIT: This gem "I root for nagging injuries that won't ruin a career, but just keeps a player at 60% thinking he can play but a step slower than full speed. Plus...nothing like a groin pull to ruin a young college kid's weekend"

how douchey and outright dumb so many State fans are--reasding that thread was really sad. There are really people in this world that think "no school but M gets that call," and that the game was "fixed." Whoa.

Immediately after the game I too was happy that ND didn't run the ball. I am less concerned after rewatching the game. When QWash was in the game we were able to stuff the run. We pulled the NT in our Nickle package and our LBs bailed for deep zone immediately at the snap. I think if they were running more we would have changed up our Nickle set to include QWash. So the obvious answer for future teams is to force us in to a Nickle set and run the ball.

On a negative note, Kalis had a really bad game. On the first play of the game Kalis went to double Nix and allowed a linebacker straight up the middle to nearly kill DMFG. He whiffed on a block to allow a sack. Then on the play, yes that play, Kalis once again went to double Nix and allowed an LB in on DMFG. If he makes that recoginition earlier DMFG can escape the pocket to the right and make a play. I don't know if it youth or the fear of Nix, but it was disappointing that the same mistake happened as earlier in the game. He is young so plent of time to get that fixed.

In the first half when Michigan had a NT in the game, ND couldn't do anything between the tackles. It wasn't until Michigan started running even fronts with to 3-techs that ND was able to generate a run game. Michigan will have to get better there in that situation, but there's an obvious solution. While that solution may be less optimal, it's not necessarily catastrophic either, especially in the short term.

It is bizarre that Kelly has become what he is. I have met him on several occasions in summer camps while he was coaching at GVSU and he was always very intense. However, he seems to have crossed the threshold from intensity to insanity. There is a difference between that high level of motivation and taking it too far to where it is breaking your players spirit. Tough for those ND kids with expectations.

That guy has proven he can block. I saw that block on the Gallon play and gave a big cheer for it. I love it when the receivers blast the opposing DBs. Chris Calloway was always a favorite because he loved to hit guys. Al and Devin need to reward him with some targets. The next few games should provide plenty of opportunities to do so.

While Brian saw Stribling on the field in the 3rd quarter, he was also on the field late in the 4th quarter. I thought that was a statement of trust and support from Mattison. The guy looks so athletic and he sticks with his man. He could develop into a lock down corner and when was the last time we had one of those? Too long ago, that's when.

As for the band, I think part of the problem is that the audio system is now way up in the scoreboards blasting from the north to the south end zone. I sit up in the club level and everything is loud up there. I have no trouble hearing the band or just about anything else that happens. Guess they need to down tilt the speakers to blast into the bowl.

Hollowell tackled very well in space and closed down on receivers fast. Yes, ND's WR got open on short passes because he was making sure not to get beat deep, but they didn't get any yards after the catch either. Thought he played really well for a third CB.

Where they were covered by shorter targets with their backs turned. You don't put the ball low there, as you would to someone like Gallon. He needed to let his TEs go up after the ball a couple times. Other than that he made mostly good throws outside of a bad one here or there, and did a lot of it without having great footwork.

Gardner did that on purpose. He seems very comfortable with throwing underneath and letting his receiver adjust to the ball. One throw to Butt was absolutely perfect in that no one but Butt could have a shot at catching the ball. However, he just couldn't make enough of an adjustment and it fell out of his finger tips. On other opportunities Gallon made perfect adjustments and caught balls.

When throwing to Butt you don't want to throw it low to make Butt go down and get it, especially against a over matched (both in terms of height and speed). You want to allow Butt to come back to the ball by going up and getting it. If the defender is going to stop it, the only way should be by running full steam through Butt's body.

My favorite thing about this team right now is that they seem good enough on both sides of the ball that Michigan can enter a game with a comprehensive gameplan and feel comfortable that they're going to be able to execute it. It seems pretty clear that they were going to allow Notre Dame to dink and dunk their way down the field because they thought that they couldn't be stopped on offense. Teams like Michigan State and Nebraska don't have that kind of freedom, and I think it's an underrated aspect of success in football today. You're going to come up against a lot of different styles of play and it's nice to have the ability to adapt.

Excuse me? Notre Dame fans are complaining that luck didnt go their way? Are you kidding me? My guess is they are too young to remember the 40 MPH wind fucking DYING in the nano-second before the 51 yard Harry Oliver kick in 1980. Or they have conveniently forgotten about Mike Gillette missing a 48 yard attempt in 1988 that would've won the game or surely they cant recall the 1990 game where a horrible pass on a third and long bounced off a Michigan defender, then a ND reciever before nestling comfortably into the arms of Lake Dawson for an insanely lucky TD. Or more recently the 6 turnover present we gave them last year.

ND fans come to expect greatness year in and year out, but for what? Aside from a couple of nationally prominent teams, they have been a 7-9 win team for 100+ years. Accept it for what it is and get over it.